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From: Crist J. Clark (crist.clark_at_attbi.com)
Date: Mon Jul 08 2002 - 18:46:17 CDT
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 03:22:21PM -0500, kyle.r.maxwell
verizon.com wrote:
> We're seeing occasional TCP traffic with FIN-RST-ACK or FIN-PSH-RST-ACK set
> in the header. The strange part is that it's always set for port 110 (this
> is in fact a legitimate POP server). The traffic is observed inside the
> firewall; I don't have an IDS sensor outside.
>
> Could this just be port scanning,
Yes, but probably no.
> OS fingerprinting,
Yes, but probably no.
> a broken stack,
Yes.
> or something else?
Yes.
> I've googled around but haven't found too much useful info,
> other than to see that other folks have seen similar stuff.
I think the interesting thing to note is that the RST-flag is set. It
is extremely rare to see a RST in a hostile packet since it takes a
_really_ broken stack to ever respond to a TCP packet with the RST
set.
If these come with any frequency, it would be interesting to do a
packet capture and see exactly what goes on before and after these fly
by.
-- Crist J. Clark | cjclarkalum.mit.edu | cjclark
jhu.edu http://people.freebsd.org/~cjc/ | cjc
freebsd.org
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